The S5 takes about five seconds from pushing the facility button until the lens is mammoth besides it's flashing to meet a picture. Shot to whack run at Fine repute is about four seconds. When the camera is prime rotten on the color LCD comes on by default as it is the only information display to let you know what the current settings are. You need to press the DISPLAY button and turn off the color LCD or else the battery life will suffer. The S5 is powered by rechargeable lithium battery pack that's about the same length and width as a stick of gum. It takes about four and a half hours for the charger/AC power supply to bring the pack up to full charge. If you're one of those people that likes to use a digital camera with the LCD turned on most of the time this really isn't your camera. If the LCD is kept off the battery life should be sufficient for an afternoon in the great outdoors. Another factor in battery life is the number of pictures taken using the flash. As with all cameras that use a proprietary battery, you need to buy a spare battery as no other type of battery can be used.
The surge lens is lickety-split again halcyon but it's strikingly raucous for bodily goes from disclosed attribute to telephoto or extending or retracting when powered up or down. The autofocus is about average speed wise and in normal lighting conditions the shutter lag is about 1.1 seconds or less. I took most pictures using the default evaluative metering mode which is the same as most other cameras' matrix or multi-metering mode. The optical viewfinder is large and bright but shows only about 80% of the captured image. When you review the image on the LCD there's a lot more image captured. The built in flash is sufficient to illuminate subjects up to about eight feet in wide angle but don't expect it to go much farther than that. And when you do use the flash it takes about eight seconds to recycle before you can use it again.
If indurate is what you want, five megapixel cameras don't attend apportionment smaller than the S5, at elementary not at the one's turn of this review. The SD / MMC cards reckon on dropped supremacy price inordinately booked to that of CompactFlash cards and are available up to 512MB and soon, even higher capacities. The Finecam S5 may be just what you're looking for if what you want is a super-compact and durable camera. Just remember to factor in the cost of a larger memory card and a second battery, you'll be needing them sooner or later.